I don't know that most of these qualify as bad decisions. The value of companies like Atari, Microsoft, and Google came from the environment they had to grow in, and had they been purchased by those who saw no value, they would have had no value. Likewise for the telephone, home computers, and solid state electronics in general.

There is one on the list, associated with Enron, that does qualify. Not simply with Enron, but with all companies:

"...for decisions to work well, they need to inspire trust... The decisions that work best are honest and compelling. They engage people and gather their own momentum."